Antoniana.it

Home page
Where we are
Maps
Brenta Canal Photo Gallery
Virtual Navigation of the Brenta Canal
The trip
Individuals' Rates
Credit Card
Groups' Rates
Download depliants
Villas and Castles
Music on the water
Navigation Times
Motorboats
Venetian Villas
Old Mills
Old Etchings
Hotels
Hotels Gallery
Eugania
Excursions
Padova Weekend
Links

|
|
Along the Brenta Canal
Attended by Casanova, Galileo, Byron
and d' Annunzio; decorated by Tiepolo and Canaletto; celebrated by Goethe
and Goldoni the ' Riviera del Brenta ' had royal guests: the King of
France and the King of Russia. Napoleon the Absburgs and the Savoias
sojourned here.
'A river - Gabriele d' Annunzio
will write in his ' Il Fuoco ' once beautiful and glorious in the
sonnets of the gay abbots when they went down along its current on board
of the ' burchielli ' full of music and pleasures.'
The 17th April 1345 the Great Council
of the Serenissima Republic of Venice
abrogated a low which had prohibited the citizens of Venice from having
proprieties on the mainland and some business of Venician Noblemen moved
to the mainland and along the banks of the Brenta Canal.
The possibility of widening the profits and intensify the cultivation
of the fields on the mainland led the Noblemen to ask themselves how
they could control closely the production. The country villas were built
and they expressed the new necessities. In one residential complex they
presented the house of the owner and the wings destined to the various
services; several kinds of Villas were created: the Farm - for whom
had in agricolture a new form of richness; the Temple, meeting piont
for artists; the Palace, used for important public moments of the family
and place of great feasts and banquets; even sumptuous residences, works
of famous intellectuals and architects, decorated and frescoed by great
painters in order to testify a season of splendours.
Great architects - Palladio, Scamozzi, Frigimelica - created summer
residences for the noblemen which spent their time of ' villeggiatura
' on the mainland in a true ' arcadia' of ladies and cavaliers who played,
sang, loved and told stories ( Sagredo, L'Arcadia in Villa 1667)
The ' Villa Veneta ' created the phenomenon of the ' Villeggiatura '
which appeared in Veneto between the XVth and XVI centuries and which
lasted for the following two, till the fall of the glorious Republic
of Venice in 1797. That is why in this region 2000 villas were built
and they witnesses a long architectural culture.
Since the XVIth century sumptuous
summer residences had been built along the banks of rivers and canals
within reach of Venice. The Brenta Canal, which linked, togather with
other rivers Venice and Padua, was the fashionable canal, place of enjoyment
and ideal continuation of the Grand Canal in Venice, where more than
70 villas were built. Here, not far from the town, the richest noblemen
spent their holidays, leaving Venice on board of confortable boats called
' burchielli '- beautiful boats - which sailed up the Brenta canal;
the vessels were moved with oars from St. Mark's Square, across the
lagoon, to Fusina, and then they were pulled by horses to Padua, across
the Brenta Canal.
It was the time of enjoyment, of
the ' smanie per la villeggiatura ' as Carlo Goldoni writes , when '
all the people have an immense freedom, game and table are always ready
and so are dancing feasts and plays '.
The trip was charming and enjoyable;
in the slow proceeding across the villas and the willow-trees, ladies
and 'cicisbei', noblemen and adventurers, actors and artists rallegrated
life on board making the river tour picturesque and pleasing. Moreover
,in those days, the noblemen used to ' attend the villas' and the gay
bands went from one villa to the other, from one feast to the other.
At the end of the XVIIIth century, with the fall of the Republic due
to the arrival of Napoleon, the end of the ' sweet life ' in Venice
reached also the mainland.
The trips and the number of the
passengers diminished and at last the service ceased. Proposed again
as a touristic itinerary by the Provincial Institution for Tourism in
Padua in the 60ies, the service started again with a high increase in
passengers.
And now, like a long time ago, all the boats sailig the Brenta Canal
from Padua to Venice are commonly called ' burchielli '; heirs of ancient
traditions,these modern and confortable boats slowly go across the water
of the Brenta Canal, while on board the guides show the story, the culture
and the art witnessed by the Villas of the river.
The Battelli del Brenta organize
excursions from Padua to Venice ( close on Mondays ), stopping at the
beautiful and most famous villas, linked to great names , among whom
Palladio and Tiepolo for the guided tours of the interiors.
And following the historical tour of the ancient ' burchielli ' of the
XVIIIth century, the trip starts from Padua and after passing six Locks,
real water lifts, which allow the boats to descend a level of 12 metres,
and nine turning bridges, and it reaches Venice in her fantastic marble
scenary in St. Mark' s Square.
Coming down the river from
Padua to Venice, the starting point of the tour is the old Lock
of the Porte Contarine in the historical heart in Padua or from
the Portello, ancient river port with its beautiful staircase of
the XVIth century, decorated by Tintoretto and its elegant Door,
in white marble from Istria , which looks like a Triumph Arch, with
eight columns and a small tower with a clock: this was the station
of all the boats which, by sailing rivers and canals, linked Padua
and its province and the lagoon of Venice.
Sailing along the Piovego Canal and coasting the old walls of thr
XVIth century with the serious bastions, immersed in the thick and
luxurious vegetation, it is possible to go under the Graissi Bridge,
reching Noventa Padovana, the ancient river port in Padua. Once
the boats stopped here and the passengers and the goods reached
Padua by cart. It lost its function when the Piovego Canal was opened.
It allowed the boats to enter the town of Padova. Nevertheless several
noble villas are a heritage of its past importance. |

Imbarco a Padova

Uscendo da Padova

Villa Giovanelli
|
Among the villas we meet the lonely
and superb Villa Giovannelli, frescoed
inside, built for the Giovannellis at the end of the XVIIth century.
It shows in its stucture both the influence of Andrea Palladio and the
new artistic trend created by Baldassarre Longhena; the unique monumental
pentagonal pronao, the high corinthian columns with statues on the pediment,
the great stiaircase created later by Giorgio Massari in 1738 make powerful
and scenic its outside aspect.
After passing the Locks in Noventa Padovana and Stra and descending
the level of water, we get to Stra, where the Brenta Canal takes form
from the Brenta River.
Here the grandeur of Villa Pisani triumphs.
The Doge' s Palace on the mainland was built for the Pisanis between
1720 and 1740 as a status-symbol of the family; it is a palace rather
than a villa , with a main facade decorated by enormous statues, painted
inside by the greatest artists of the XVIIIth century: Guarana, Rosalba
Carriera and Francesco Simonini: a monumental work which guest inbelieveble
masterpieces - The Triumph of Baccus by Guarana, the Pompeian Room in
Empire Style, the superb Ball Room decorated by Giambattista Tiepolo
with a frsco representing the Glorification of the Pisanis, a work which
would be the last one by the painter in Italy, a last present of this
great painter of skies and angels. A eleven hectere park belongs to
the villa, where we can meet a labyrinth, an heritage of the glorious
time of the ' villeggiatura '.
By sailing we go to Fiesso d' Artico,
where it is possible to admire Villa Soranzo with a frescoed facade
and then to Dolo for a visit of the ancient Mills, important, a long
time ago, for the economy of the area. It would be a pleasure here to
go for a short walk along this river village.
After passing the Lock in Dolo we sail through the green of the willow-trees,
the villas and the turning bridges to Mira, celebrated by Carlo Goldoni
in1760. ' Here we are in Mira, decorated with beautiful palaces and
gardens. We leave the river , we breathe, walk, have lunch and then
we come back on the boat. The famous horse pulls it and we go along
the Brenta Canal. There are people singing, smoking, playing or simply
talking about the sad lunch.'
In Mira we meet the high concentration if villas, we can admire the
famous facades along the Canal, the green bends, the untouched corners
where the willow- trees caresses water. It
is important to underline the presence of Villa
Barchessa Valmarana with a wide portico; Villa
Widmann, typical residence of the XVIIIth century with a delicious
garden; Villa Corner, a theatre of banquets and
long feasts of the family itself - Gaspare Gozzi Writes they lasted
even for a week; Villa Foscarini, where Lord Byron spent two years (
1817 -1818 ). We reach then Oriago,
an old theatre of wars between Padua and Venice, with the famous column
- the border line between the two towns.
Among the several villas with a Venician
atmosphere, we meet Villa Gradenigo of the
XVIth century. We can see only the central body frescoed by Benedetto
Caliari, Paolo Veronese' s brother.
And always sailing we get to Malcontenta, where we can admire the elegance
and the grandeur of Villa
Foscari, called La Malcontenta, one of the masterpieces By the genius
of Andrea Palladio. It is an example of Temple with a great pronao reflecting
, melancholic and superb, on the water of the Brenta Canal.
The navigation of the river continues and after passing the Lock in
Moranzani and descending the last fall we reach Venice and the magic
scenary of St. Mark' s Square, where our fantastic tour gets to its
end.
|